Absence of geographical structure of morphological variation in Juniperus oxycedrus L. subsp. oxycedrus in the Balkan Peninsula (CROSBI ID 173326)
Prilog u časopisu | izvorni znanstveni rad | međunarodna recenzija
Podaci o odgovornosti
Brus, Robert ; Ballian, Dalibor ; Zhelev, Peter ; Pandža, Marija ; Bobinac, Martin ; Acevski, Jane ; Raftoyannis, Yannis ; Jarni, Kristjan
engleski
Absence of geographical structure of morphological variation in Juniperus oxycedrus L. subsp. oxycedrus in the Balkan Peninsula
We examined leaf and mature seed cone variation of Juniperus oxycedrus L. subsp. oxycedrus in 12 natural populations across the species range in the Balkan Peninsula. We measured 10 morphological traits from a minimum of 100 leaves in each of 190 individuals, and two morphological traits from 30- 50 seed cones in each of 94 females. High phenotypic variation was found, but no geographical structure or cline across populations was detected for any of the studied traits. Mean values of comparable leaf and cone morphological traits did not differ considerably from values reported elsewhere. Gender dimorphism in leaf morphology was detected, but it was not distributed uniformly throughout the studied area. An ANOVA model with both nested and crossed effects revealed that the largest proportion of the total variation was, as expected, contained within populations, partly as among-tree variation (18-47%, depending on the trait) and partly as within-tree variation (33-77%), which was remarkably high. Gender dimorphism explained only 0-3% of the total variation. Differences among populations (2-23%) were significant for all studied traits except one ; however, PCA showed no clear geographical differentiation of the studied populations. This lack of phylogeographical structure may be the consequence of repeatedly occurring colonisation-retreat scenarios and suggests the existence of several small refugial populations scattered over a large part of the Balkan Peninsula in the Pleistocene. Further research including palaeobotanical and molecular genetic studies will be needed to better understand the forces that shaped current variation patterns of J. oxycedrus L. subsp. oxycedrus in the Balkan Peninsula.
phenotypic variation; plant variation; plant morphology; biometry; sexual dimorphism; geographical differentiation; Pleistocene refugia
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Podaci o izdanju
130 (4)
2011.
657-670
objavljeno
1612-4669
10.1007/s10342-010-0457-1